<p>The Haryana assembly elections have thrown up striking similarities with the 2009 polls – a hung House and a ruling party falling exactly six seats short of the majority mark.</p>.<p>In the 2009 assembly elections, the ruling Congress won 40 seats, the same as the BJP this time.</p>.<p>The Indian National Lok Dal, the main opposition party then won 31 seats, the same number the Congress bagged in the just concluded elections.</p>.<p>In 2009, the Congress got the support of seven independents.</p>.<p>Seven candidates have won as independents, and the BJP hopes to get their backing to form the next government.</p>.<p>Last time, Gopal Kanda was among the seven independent candidates who extended support to the ruling Congress.</p>.<p>Kanda is in the picture again, this time as a Haryana Lokhit Party MLA.</p>.<p>Like last time, he has been elected from Sirsa.</p>.<p>Kanda was later made the home minister in the then Bhupinder Singh Hooda government.</p>.<p>In 2012, he tendered his resignation after he was booked by the Delhi Police in a case of abetment to suicide.</p>.<p>Kanda has expressed support for the BJP this time. It is not immediately clear if he will get a berth in the Haryana ministry if the party forms the government with his help.</p>.<p>In 2009, the Congress also got the support of five of the six Haryana Janhit Congress MLAs apart from the independents, enabling it to form a stable government.</p>.<p>With "Lokhit" in its name, Kanda's party may have a similar sound. But he is its lone MLA.</p>.<p>Haryana witnessed a hung assembly also in 1996 when the Congress won only nine seats and the Haryana Vikas Party, led by former chief minister Bansi Lal, bagged 33.</p>.<p>Later, Bansi Lal formed the government with the support of the BJP.</p>
<p>The Haryana assembly elections have thrown up striking similarities with the 2009 polls – a hung House and a ruling party falling exactly six seats short of the majority mark.</p>.<p>In the 2009 assembly elections, the ruling Congress won 40 seats, the same as the BJP this time.</p>.<p>The Indian National Lok Dal, the main opposition party then won 31 seats, the same number the Congress bagged in the just concluded elections.</p>.<p>In 2009, the Congress got the support of seven independents.</p>.<p>Seven candidates have won as independents, and the BJP hopes to get their backing to form the next government.</p>.<p>Last time, Gopal Kanda was among the seven independent candidates who extended support to the ruling Congress.</p>.<p>Kanda is in the picture again, this time as a Haryana Lokhit Party MLA.</p>.<p>Like last time, he has been elected from Sirsa.</p>.<p>Kanda was later made the home minister in the then Bhupinder Singh Hooda government.</p>.<p>In 2012, he tendered his resignation after he was booked by the Delhi Police in a case of abetment to suicide.</p>.<p>Kanda has expressed support for the BJP this time. It is not immediately clear if he will get a berth in the Haryana ministry if the party forms the government with his help.</p>.<p>In 2009, the Congress also got the support of five of the six Haryana Janhit Congress MLAs apart from the independents, enabling it to form a stable government.</p>.<p>With "Lokhit" in its name, Kanda's party may have a similar sound. But he is its lone MLA.</p>.<p>Haryana witnessed a hung assembly also in 1996 when the Congress won only nine seats and the Haryana Vikas Party, led by former chief minister Bansi Lal, bagged 33.</p>.<p>Later, Bansi Lal formed the government with the support of the BJP.</p>